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China seeks Austria’s help in easing China-EU tensions

By Thomson Reuters Jun 25, 2026 | 10:38 AM

BEIJING, June 25 (Reuters) – China and Austria should respect each other’s “core interests” and work to improve China-EU ties, Beijing’s top diplomat told his Austrian counterpart on Thursday, as disputes ​over trade, market access and Russia strain relations with ‌Brussels.

“The correct positioning of China-Europe relations is as partners, not rivals,” Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said during a meeting with Austria’s Beate Meinl-Reisinger in Beijing, an official Chinese readout showed.

The Austrian foreign minister is on a five-day visit ‌to ​China — and for her third meeting in ⁠a year with Wang — at ⁠a time when Beijing is seeking direct channels with individual European capitals amid wobbly China-EU relations.

Last week, EU officials said views were gradually converging among the bloc’s 27 members on the need ​to curb its widening trade deficit with China and reduce its reliance on Beijing for rare earths and other critical supplies.

China’s ⁠goods trade surplus with the EU ⁠hit €360.6 billion ($410.29 billion) in 2025, up 15% from 2024. ​But EU members have differing views on how to respond.

Countries including ​France favour a firmer approach, while Germany, the bloc’s largest ‌exporter, and Spain, which has drawn growing Chinese investment, have taken a more cautious stance.

Austria appears to lean toward the cautious side, as some Chinese automakers including Xpeng look to Austrian contract manufacturers as ⁠a foothold for European production.

Around 650 Austrian firms also operate in China.

In a social media post on Tuesday, Meinl-Reisinger said Austria’s approach to China ⁠is “consistent, pragmatic, and ‌European.”

“Our aim is to strengthen European sovereignty, free ⁠ourselves from dependencies, and at the same time ​maintain stable ‌trade relations with China based on fair, reliable, ​and rules-based ⁠conditions,” she wrote.

During Thursday’s meeting, Wang said Beijing “appreciates Austria’s rational and pragmatic policy toward China”.

The country “hopes Austria can continue to play a constructive role for the development of China-Europe relations,” he added.

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(Reporting by Xiuhao Chen, Shi Bu and Liz Lee, Editing by William Maclean ​and Andrew Heavens)